Extra: Car Colors & Storage Units

额外:汽车颜色和储物装置

Freakonomics Radio

社会与文化

2024-05-20

35 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Presenting two stories from "The Economics of Everyday Things": Why does it seem like every car is black, white, or gray these days? And: How self-storage took over America.

单集文稿 ...

  • Hey, there.

  • It's Steva Dubner.

  • And this is a bonus episode, actually, a pair of episodes from the economics of everyday things, another show that we make here at the free economics radio Network.

  • The host of this show is Zachary Crockett, a journalist who loves to explore and explain, well the economics of everyday things.

  • For instance, car colors and storage units.

  • I am hoping that after you hear these episodes, you will start listening every week to the economics of everyday things, which you can find on any podcast app.

  • Here's Zachary.

  • Like a lot of men his age, my dad likes to talk about how everything used to be better.

  • Shoes used to last longer, musicians used to be more talented, movies used to cost a couple bucks, and cars, they just had a lot more character.

  • My first car was a 1965 Chevy Impala, and this was a real car.

  • It was a real car I bought from a neighbor.

  • It had 25,000 miles on it, and I paid $400 for it.

  • I mean, the personality that it had, every detail about it, the headlights, the tail lights, the fender, the bumper, the doors.

  • You could punch the 65 Chevy and you'd break your hand.

  • As Tom Crockett tells it, a big part of that character was the multitude of colors that you'd see on the road back in the 1960s and seventies.

  • In the old days, we had variations of green and variations of brown, tan colors.

  • There were light blues, lots of different shades of blues.

  • My uncle Guy had like a canary yellow Cadillac.

  • He'd drive it with a top down.

  • But these days, he says, it seems like all the cars on the road look the same.